„The road ahead just got much more difficult“

Since President Trump’s inauguration, there has been a flood of executive orders to stop “woke” projects and to abolish the legacy of the Biden administration. Alexandra McGee, Vice President of Strategic Initiatives at MCE and New-Bridge Alumna, gives an insight into what this means for the renewable energy sector:
On January 20, 2025, the new administration issued a flurry of executive orders. Among them, Unleashing American Energy put an immediate pause on funding provided by the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and the Infrastructure Investments and Jobs Act (IIJA). I had recently secured a Department of Energy (DOE) grant with IRA funds to install electric vehicle (EV) charging stations at locations identified as critical by our residents living in underserved and Disadvantaged Communities (DAC). Given the grant’s emphasis on including diverse voices in transportation planning, I received the following message:
Recipients and subrecipients [of DOE funding] must cease any activities, including contracted activities, and stop incurring costs associated with DEI… Costs incurred after the date of this letter will not be reimbursed.
That week, we had a number of focus group sessions scheduled to identify what clean transportation solutions would work for our neighborhoods. We were put in the position of deciding whether we’d cancel those sessions or pay for the cost of holding them ourselves. Given the preparation we’d done and the commitments we’d made to the community, we decided to eat the cost and hold them anyway.
„The flurry of orders is creating a sense of uncertainty and instability.“
Unfortunately, these sorts of decisions are being held everywhere. During the Biden administration, many of us were tasked with securing as much federal funding as we could in order to advance renewable energy and community commitments. With the federal funding freeze, all of that work is now possibly all for naught. Even beyond specific grants, the flurry of orders is creating a sense of uncertainty and instability. This translates into a chilling effect on projects. California remains committed to our ambitious climate goals, but if our state faces a deficit due to the withholding of federal funding, many of the state budget allocations designed for such projects are unexpectedly in jeopardy.
This particular DOE grant was later granted permission to move forward, only to be paused again later. This choppy stop-and-go movement is not only frustrating for staff but it actually increases costs and timelines as staff navigate these confusing and sometimes contradictory directions. While we remain committed to building a sustainable future, the road ahead just got much more difficult.
Alexandra McGee is the Vice President of Strategic Initiatives at MCE, California’s first Community Choice Aggregation (CCA) program. As an Atlantik-Brücke New Bridge fellow, she speaks on the importance of democratizing the just transition to a clean energy economy and the strength of local efforts to combat our shared global concerns.